Crossword clues for lancelot
lancelot
- Arthurian knight
- Round Table member
- Knight of note
- Round Table VIP
- One of Arthur's knights
- Lover of Guinevere
- Richard Gere's role in "First Knight"
- Knight who pursued Guinevere
- Knight raised by the Lady of the Lake
- Galahad's dad
- ''Camelot'' character
- Trusted knight
- Sir Galahad's dad
- Nicholas Clay's "Excalibur" role
- Loyal friend of Gawain
- Legendary knight
- Legendary court figure
- Knighted son of King Ban
- Knight of the Round Table and close friend of King Arthur's wife, Guinevere
- King Arthur's most trusted knight
- Hank Azaria's "Spamalot" role
- Guinevere's love
- Round Table knight
- Most trusted knight of King Arthur
- Role played by Richard Gere and John Cleese
- Model of chivalry
- (Arthurian legend) one of the knights of the Round Table
- Friend of King Arthur until (according to some versions of the legend) he became the lover of Arthur's wife Guinevere
- Guinevere's paramour
- Guinevere's lover
- Greatest of Arthur's knights
- Father of Galahad
- Arthurian lover
- Lover many yesterdays ago
- Guinevere’s lover
- Arthurian knight taking his weapon back to lake
- Knight requires weapon - and fortune
- Knight provides weapon to many
- Knight left at once, galloping across line
- Look through window to see legendary adulterer
- Legendary knight's weapon, an item for auction
- Legendary knight in a cell, not free
- Journal contains old line about knight
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
masc. proper name, Old French, a double-diminutive of Frankish Lanzo, a hypocoristic name formed from some one of the Germanic names in Land-; compare Old English Landbeorht "land-bright," in Old French Lambert.
Wikipedia
Sir Lancelot du Lac (meaning Lancelot of the Lake, baptised as Galahad) was one of the Knights of the Round Table in the Arthurian legend. He typically features as King Arthur's greatest companion, the lord of Joyous Gard and the greatest swordsman and jouster of the age — until his adultery with Queen Guinevere is discovered, causing a civil war exploited by Mordred which brings about the end of Arthur's kingdom.
His first appearance as a main character is in Chrétien de Troyes' Le Chevalier de la Charette ("The Knight of the Cart"), written in the 12th century. In the 13th century, he was the main focus in the lengthy Vulgate Cycle, where his exploits are recounted in the section known as the Prose Lancelot. Lancelot's life and adventures have been featured in several medieval romances, often with conflicting background stories and chains of events.
Lancelot was a knight of the mythical Round Table.
Lancelot may also refer to:
- Lancelot-Grail, a volume of medieval French works that are a major source of Arthurian legend
- Lancelot Gobbo, a Shakespearean character
- Lancelot Lakeknight, a character in the Battle Arena Toshinden fighting game series
- Lancelet, a group of primitive chordates
- Lancelot, the Knight of the Cart, a 12th-century poem by Chretien de Troyes
- Lancelot (novel), a 1978 novel by Walker Percy
- Lancelot du Lac (film), a 1974 film directed by Robert Bresson
- 2041 Lancelot, an asteroid
- Lancelot (Merlin), an episode of the 2008 BBC TV series
Lancelot is a 1977 novel by the American author Walker Percy. It tells the story of the dejected lawyer Lancelot Lamar, who murders his wife after discovering that he is not the father of her youngest daughter. He ends up in a mental institution, where his story is told through his reflections on his disturbing past. The novel compares the protagonist unfavorably to his namesake, Sir Lancelot, as he experiences a vision of an empty modern American culture which invokes the symbolism of the mythical Wasteland. Lamar's quest to expose this moral emptiness is a transposition of the quest for the Holy Grail; as he witnesses and records the increasing moral depravity of his wife and daughter during the filming of a Hollywood movie, he becomes obsessed with and corrupted by the immorality he seeks to condemn. The novel is replete with Arthurian references, including characters based on Merlin and Percival. The point of view of Lancelot is first person. It is dramatic monologue. Through this monologue, the reader learns Lancelot Lamar’s view of the world. He makes accusations, but also questions his own accusations. He sees that there is a problem with modern American culture. Lancelot seeks to create a New Order based on his own code of honor. This code of honor includes the preferred actions and roles woman and an avoidance of self-knowledge. Lancelot sees himself as a leader among other male leaders in his New Order. Other citizens will be followers. He will be part of an elite group that has knowledge of the world like himself. Lancelot’s monologue also serves to develop themes such as the importance of innocence in sexual identity and the issues concerning human sexuality. These are seen in his commentary of when he sees Lucy, his daughter engage in sexual activity with the two actors, Troy Dana and Riane. It is also seen in observation of his wife, Margot’s infidelity. His values are also seen in his comparisons of his first wife, Lucy, to his second wife, Margot. Lancelot also values innocence in the rape victim, Anna, who resides in the room next to his in the mental institution.
Lancelot is a standard text adventure with limited graphics on some platforms game by Level 9 released in . If focuses on Lancelot's quest to find the Holy Grail.
Usage examples of "lancelot".
The right human operator was only half of Lancelot, and to develop the other half had been the work of decades even for mighty Earth.
He had been on Moonbase just a little longer than one standard day, and this was the second time he had put on Lancelot, and now he was wearing it as his only protection as he rode a large platform elevator up to the airless, frozen night-side surface.
They had told him that Lancelot would provide him with all the air he needed, all the oxygen, to be exact, and he had no real doubt that they were right.
Michel still felt perfectly comfortable as, with dropping pressure, the furled stuff of Lancelot around him crackled a little, a sound suggesting stiff paper wings.
The dazzle was all in short wavelengths of radiation that only Lancelot allowed his eyes to see.
When Michel himself moved, he could hear Lancelot faintly crackling, weak spasms across the audio spectrum.
Below, while Michel was being robed in a tight-fitting gym suit of bright orange and then in Lancelot, they had discussed briefly what was to be tried today, simple free flight in space.
Michel knew another momentary dazzle before Lancelot scaled down the radiation impinging from the sources directly into his eyes.
He never doubted that in Lancelot he would be enabled to move as he had never moved before.
Gray, tenuous-looking limbs extending themselves from his Lancelot, Frank grappled with his prey.
He could feel that his commands to Lancelot were fumbling, groping things, only beginning to find out their true paths.
Then, this time carefully tamping momentum back into the reservoirs where Lancelot could hold it stored, Michel dropped back onto the basalt surface.
For the first time since his first takeoff Michel was not in complete control of what his Lancelot was doing.
Michel had been wearing Lancelot he might have found some amusement in trying to sort out the several sets of what he had learned were called harmonics.
Maybe it is theoretically possible for Lancelot to draw that kind of power.